Life atop China's car market is starting to look shaky for BYD
BYD's monthly sales have stagnated of late and with the summer months being a traditionally slower time for consumer purchases, that trajectory isn't expected to reverse any time soon.
Discounting is also now being looked sternly upon by Beijing, with China last week pledging to rein in 'irrational competition' in the electric vehicle sector, reflecting authorities' wish to tackle the deflationary price wars that are threatening economic and industrial growth.
Some of BYD's international forays are also proving more challenging than expected, raising the question, is China's No. 1 automaker on shaky ground?
The Shenzhen-based behemoth currently looks like it will undershoot its annual sales target for 2025, in what would be a rare miss after a multi-year bull run.
The number of electric and hybrid vehicles BYD needs to sell each month through December has hit 560,000 units, in excess of levels it could hope to achieve typically in a single month. The most vehicles BYD has ever sold in a month was just shy of 515,000, in December last year.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
Analysts are now doubting whether BYD can hit 5.5 million units in 2025. Consensus estimates continue to be downgraded.
Morgan Stanley last month lowered its projection to 5.3 million, pointing to a smaller number of new models, while Bloomberg Intelligence's Joanne Chen says BYD will need to sacrifice some profit and maintain its hefty discounting in the second half if it wants to stay on track.
'Regulatory scrutiny will temper direct cuts to vehicle sticker prices but competition isn't going away and retail promotions are still needed to sustain sales momentum,' she said. 'New model roll outs and steady tech upgrade are also crucial.'
Bing Yuan, a fund manager at Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management, said many market watchers now realistically expect sales of around 5 million. 'My sense is that is the consensus,' she said.
Stripping out overseas and commercial sales, BYD's core car deliveries in China are shrinking.
In June, they slipped 8 per cent year-on-year as vehicles from brands like Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, Xpeng and Xiaomi won over buyers. HSBC Holdings data show that Geely was the largest gainer of market share in the first half, while BYD was among the biggest losers.
Overseas sales are faring better and those are looking on target to reach BYD's forecast of 800,000.
Indeed, BYD is already almost 60 per cent of the way there. But while higher margin international sales will help BYD offset aggressive domestic discounting, some foreign markets are presenting new difficulties.
BYD has grand plans for Saudi Arabia, for example, hoping to triple its footprint after Tesla entered the country. But EVs account for just over 1 per cent of total car sales in the kingdom, with high costs, sparse charging infrastructure and extreme temperatures challenging EV adoption.
India, a potentially huge market, has meanwhile consistently blocked BYD's efforts to expand and despite rapid growth from a low base in Europe, there are substantial tariff headwinds and increasing competition from legacy automakers that already have consumers' trust, not to mention more extensive after-sales networks.
At home, regulatory scrutiny has also intensified around BYD as it continues to be at the fore of an EV price war.
In late May, it slashed prices by as much as 34 per cent, triggering renewed sector-wide discounts. Its moves were later discouraged in a veiled warning by the Chinese Communist Party's mouthpiece the People's Daily, which slammed the 'rat-race competition.'
Whether Beijing can actually stop price discounting by a privately held company is a point of debate.
Tianlei Huang, a China program coordinator at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said authorities may resort to administrative tools such as price reviews or cost investigations to establish a de facto price floor, or coordinate a concerted capacity reduction among leading EV makers, although he acknowledged those measures won't be easy.
Regardless, BYD must be careful. As the company gears up to release first-half results later next month and July sales data within weeks, analysts will have their spreadsheets at the ready, waiting to see whether those 2025 targets look even further in the distance. BLOOMBERG

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
26 minutes ago
- Business Times
Asia: Tokyo's Nikkei leads rally after Japan-US trade deal
[HONG KONG] Tokyo stocks rallied with the yen on Wednesday after Japan and the United States finally hammered out a trade deal to slash Donald Trump's tariffs, including those on the crucial car sector. Investors were also cheered by news that Washington had reached agreements with Indonesia and the Philippines, stoking optimism that other countries will achieve deals to avoid the worst of the US president's levies. Despite a lack of deals being made leading up to Trump's self-imposed Aug 1 cut-off date, equity markets have been on the march in recent weeks on optimism that governments will eventually get over the line. Japan had been one of those yet to sign, despite a string of trips to Washington by trade envoy Ryosei Akazawa, dampening investor sentiment in Tokyo. But Trump said on Tuesday that officials had agreed to a 'massive' deal that would include a 15 per cent tariff on imports from Japan, down from the previously threatened 25 per cent. The pact also saw the 25 per cent levy on autos - a major export to the United States - slashed to 15 per cent. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up 'We just completed a massive Deal with Japan, perhaps the largest Deal ever made,' Trump announced on his Truth Social platform. 'Japan will invest, at my direction, US$550 Billion Dollars into the United States, which will receive 90 per cent of the Profits.' He did not provide further details on the investment plan, but claimed the deal 'will create Hundreds of Thousands of Jobs.' Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said that he needed to examine the deal before commenting. Akazawa wrote on X: 'Mission accomplished.' Traders poured back into the market, pushing the Nikkei up more than two per cent, thanks to soaring automakers. Tokyo and Mitsubishi rocketed around 12 per cent and Nissan jumped more than nine per cent. The yen strengthened to 146.20 per dollar - compared with close to 148 Tuesday. The unit had already enjoyed a recent tick-up after Ishiba vowed to remain in office despite a devastating weekend election loss. Trump also hailed an agreement with Manila that will see the toll on Philippine goods lowered by one percentage point to 19 per cent, while tariffs on Indonesia were slashed from 32 per cent to 19 per cent. Shares in Manila and Jakarta rose. The announcements boosted hopes that other deals could be in the pipeline before next Friday's deadline, though talks with the European Union and South Korea remain elusive for now. Still, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he would meet his Chinese counterparts in Stockholm next week for talks, as a separate mid-August deadline approaches for US levies on Beijing to snap back to steeper levels. Elsewhere in Asia, Hong Kong built on its 2025 surge to hit its highest level since late 2021, while Shanghai, Sydney, Singapore and Taipei were also well up. Seoul was flat and Wellington dipped. The advances came after a broadly positive day on Wall Street where the S&P 500 hit another peak but the Nasdaq snapped a six-day streak of records. Eyes are also on the release of earnings from Google parent Alphabet and other tech giants including Tesla and Intel. AFP
Business Times
2 hours ago
- Business Times
Weaker US dollar, bond yields lift gold to more than five-week high
[BENGALURU] Gold prices climbed to a more than five-week peak on Wednesday (Jul 23), supported by a softer US dollar and lower Treasury yields as investors looked forward to signs of progress in US trade discussions. Spot gold was steady at US$3,430.19 per ounce, as at 0051 GMT, after hitting its highest since Jun 16 earlier in the session. US gold futures were flat at US$3,443.30. The US dollar index languished near a two-week low against its rivals, making greenback-priced gold less expensive for other currency holders. Benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields on Tuesday touched their lowest level since Jul 9. US President Donald Trump said the US and Japan had struck a trade deal that includes a 15 per cent tariff that will be levied on US imports from the country. US and Chinese officials will meet in Stockholm next week to discuss an extension to the deadline for negotiating a trade deal, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up With an Aug 1 deadline looming before the imposition of sweeping import duties on trade partners, Bessent said on Monday that the administration is more concerned with the quality of trade agreements than the timing. Meanwhile, Trump continued his attack on US Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, calling him a 'numbskull' who has kept interest rates too high, but he will be out in eight months. Trump has been hammering at Powell for months for not cutting rates and frequently raised the possibility of ousting him. The US central bank is widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged at their monetary policy meeting scheduled for next week. Gold tends to perform well in a low-interest-rate environment. SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, said its holdings rose 0.82 per cent to 954.80 tonnes on Tuesday from 947.06 tonnes on Monday. Spot silver eased 0.1 per cent to US$39.23 per ounce, platinum fell 0.3 per cent to US$1,437.83 and palladium slipped 0.7 per cent to US$1,266.49. REUTERS
Business Times
3 hours ago
- Business Times
Japan PM Ishiba weighs whether to step down over US trade talks, Yomiuri says
[TOKYO] Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is planning to soon decide whether to step down after assessing progress in tariff negotiations with the United States, Yomiuri newspaper reported on Wednesday. Ishiba is facing growing opposition from within his Liberal Democratic Party for his vow to stay in power despite the ruling coalition's bruising defeat in Sunday's upper house election. The outcome of Japan's ongoing trade talks with the US will become clear this month, as negotiators rush to clinch a deal by the Aug 1 deadline, which could become a turning point for the administration, the paper said. US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that he had just completed a 'massive' deal with Japan that included US$550 billion in investments into the United States. According to Yomiuri, Ishiba told his close associates on Tuesday evening that he would explain how he would take responsibility for the election loss once a solution was reached on trade negotiations. The prime minister was planning to hold a press conference to announce his decision once the tariff negotiations' outcome became clear, the newspaper reported without citing its sources. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up The prime minister's official residence was not immediately available to comment on Yomiuri's report. In explaining his decision to stay on, Ishiba has stressed the need to avoid creating a political vacuum as Japan faced challenges including difficult trade negotiations with the U.S. that would have a huge impact on the export-reliant economy. 'I will stay in office and do everything in my power to chart a path toward resolving these challenges,' Ishiba said in a news conference on Monday, adding that he intended to speak directly with Trump as soon as possible and deliver tangible results. Ishiba is expected to meet ruling party heavyweights later on Wednesday for discussions on the election outcome. REUTERS